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My husband, Dave, has had unpleasant reactions to eating wheat for a number of years, and the condition has been worsening. He felt so much better when he went on a gluten-free diet that he decided to do some proper medical testing for celiac disease. In celiac, the villi of the small intestine are destroyed, so nutrients cannot be absorbed. Like other diseases, it can be mild or severe, and life-threatening.

Dave's tests (for the specific antibodies to gluten) came back yesterday, negative for celiac. He's very relieved he doesn't have to do the endoscopic exam (to confirm the intestinal damage by visual examination)! He'll continue to avoid gluten, but if we slip up, like forgetting to bring our tamari to the sushi restaurant -- regular soy sauce has wheat -- it's only his comfort and not his life that's at stake. Hooray!

We've pretty well adjusted to Life Without Wheat (although I have a stash of my favorite chewy wholegrain bread in the freezer, that I dole out to myself a slice or two at a time). A Canadian outfit named Tinkyada makes wonderful rice pastas, and there are some interesting soy pastas out there, too. It turns out that most quick bread/cake/cookie recipes turn out just fine with brown rice flour instead of wheat, and I'm experimenting with gluten free yeast breads (none so far are very good). Fortunately, oats seem to be okay, since oatmeal is our staple breakfast (oats are fine for most celiac patients, but oats are usually processed in facilities that use wheat, and even a dust speck of wheat can be injurious) and oat flour is delicious. Alas, Dave reacts to spelt and kamut, which are wheat cousins, very ancient grains. We'll have to check barley and rye (which most celiac patients can't handle); however, rice in all its glorious forms, millet, corn, quinoa (which, alas, he does not care for), soy and potato are all fine.

One of the luxuries of Boulder Creek is a good health food store, one of two markets. The other is our garden, which feeds us much of the year. Current harvest; the end of the asparagus, lots of purslane, turnip greens, mint-always-mint, an array of other herbs, a few turnips, winter squash and pumpkins from last year; still working on the green beans I froze last summer. Got some baby lettuce the other day. Must wait a month or more for the rest.

The added wrinkle is that Dave doesn't eat meat, and almost all the meat substitutes ("soysage") use wheat gluten for texture. There are a few exceptions -- including the "chicken tenders" form of Quorn and taro burgers.

have you heard about foodintol.com?

Date: 2007-06-05 07:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] 1skygodess.livejournal.com
On one of their pages I found this: "What is the difference between Gluten intolerance and Celiac Disease?

Gluten intolerance is a broad term which includes all kinds of sensitivity to Gluten. A small proportion of Gluten intolerant people will test positive to Celiac Disease test, and so are called Celiacs (~0.5% of the population).

But most Gluten sensitive people return negative or inconclusive results upon Celiac testing. The correct term for these people is Non-Celiac Gluten Sensitive (NCGS) and may be as many as ~15% of all people or 1 in 7.

The most accurate and effective way to identify NCGS is to do an Elimination Diet or our easy version the Detection Diet in The Tuesday Club


Celiac Disease (CD) was the first type of Gluten sensitivity for which diagnostic testing was devised - in the 1940s.

Although Celiac testing is still used in many clinics as a first test for Gluten sensitivity, it only picks up the small percentage of Gluten-sensitive people who are Celiac.

It misses the NCGS patients. Consequently this latter group is poorly diagnosed and misses out on discovering the simple and drug-free remedy of a Gluten-free diet for a dramatic recovery. "

It's a little expensive. But we aren't sure what the intolerance is. In your case it seems you already know. I'd run with that. I believe it's free to join and it only costs if you want their help. (Sorry I can't remember, it's been several months & we're just trying to survive for now.)

BTW, I'm a friend of FlyinAmazon.

Blue Skies!

Date: 2007-06-05 10:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] deborahjross.livejournal.com
Hi, Friend of FlyinAmazon! Thanks for your post -- I'll check out the site you mentioned. Over the years, people have told me about all kinds of unorthodox tests, none of which are covered by insurance. We're a little skeptical, as a result.

The antibody tests are only the first part of screening for celiac disease. You have to demonstrate damage to the intestinal villi to confirm it. We're quite relieved, as celiac can be extremely serious as opposed to uncomfortable and inconvenient. Since that's been ruled out, we're happy to continue empirically. The purpose of the testing was to make sure he didn't have the really bad version.

Dave established his sensitivity to gluten with an elimination diet (a brown rice fast) about 10 years ago. At that time, he could eat bread or wheat pasta about once a week without too much ill effects. As I said, his sensitivity has been getting worse, so now he reacts to members of the wheat family, like spelt. Who knows what might have happened if he had not continued to eat a small amount of wheat? But this is what we have now, and fortunately, I'm an adventurous cook.

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Deborah J. Ross

November 2020

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